View allAll Photos Tagged LEONARD
Even though this is not the shot I had in mind, I am still pleased that we were at least able to find and see the comet Leonard. It was not visible to the naked eye at the time, so we just trusted the directions for the correct location and hoped that something would show up in the camera. I still was not able to see it as I was looking through the lens, but was thrilled when I zoomed in and saw that it was indeed there. Really felt lucky because right after the sun came up the clouds rolled in. This was taken with an 85mm lens at F2.
Bigger than life itself.
Leonard Norman Cohen CC GOQ (September 21, 1934 ā November 7, 2016) was a Canadian songwriter, singer, poet, and novelist. Themes commonly explored throughout his work include faith and mortality, isolation and depression, betrayal and redemption, social and political conflict, sexual and romantic love, desire, regret, and loss. He was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame, the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame, and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. He was invested as a Companion of the Order of Canada, the nation's highest civilian honour. In 2011, he received one of the Prince of Asturias Awards for literature and the ninth Glenn Gould Prize. In 2023, Rolling Stone named Cohen the 103rd-greatest singer.
Source Wikipedia
Photos prises alors que le photographe se trouve au Belvédère Kondiaronk sur le Mont-Royal à Montréal
fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonard_Cohen
www.mtl.org/fr/quoi-faire/patrimoine-et-architecture/mura...
C/2021 A1 Leonard
19/12/2021 h 17.36 loc.
LocalitĆ : San Romualdo - Ravenna
Tecnosky AG70 su Avalon M1
QSI583ws raffreddata -10 - Filtri RGB Astrodon RGB GenII E-series
RGB: R 5x30", G 5x30", B 4x30" in Bin1
Acquisizione: MaximDL5 - immagine calibrata con bias, dark e flat
Elaborazione: MaximDL5, Astroart8, Paint Shop Pro2021, Topaz e Nik plug-in.
www.cfm2004.altervista.org/astrofotografia/comete/c2021a1...
Tracks straighten out here after a sweeping curve just west of Leonard. The cars will be set out at Sheldon, and the power will return lite back to Davenport for the evening.
A bird's eye view of the former Rockingham (Anglican) Church (1875-1941) in Rockingham, Ontario, Canada.
The Rockingham Church, formerly known as St. Leonard's Anglican Church, was built by Reverend John S. J. Watson and others around 1875 when the hamlet of Rockingham was a thriving community. Essentially abandoned in the 1940s, closed in 1941, and by the mid-1990s the building had deteriorated significantly. Watson was the founder of Rockingham, at the time known as Watson's Mill.
In 1995, the Friends of the Rockingham Church formed to save the building from destruction. Major structural repairs were carried out in 1999 and 2000.
A post and beam structure, the building is a unique survivor of its kind in Renfrew County, Ontario, Canada, and one of the oldest remaining buildings in the area.
In 1999, the Townships of Brudenell, Lyndoch & Raglan designated the church a heritage site under the Ontario Heritage Act.
Here's a history of the Rockingham Church: rockinghamchurch.org/a-little-history/
As well as this one, with podcasts regarding John Watson: As well as this one: rockinghamchurch.org/
St Leonardās Catholic Church in the North End - I didnāt know there was a church like this in Boston, feels like a trip to Europe! Shot with Sony a6000 and 10-18mm Lens, processed in Lightroom (iPad version).
How could I pass up the chance to bring you another of the images of Comet Leonard that I shot right at the end of 2021? I could only see the comet as a faint streak in the sky, even using averted vision, where you view an object by not looking at it directly. That unaided view was nothing more than a hint of how wonderfully my camera would capture the light from this visitor that won't return to our planet's skies for another 80000 years or thereabouts.
There were only two nights when I could get out for some nightscape photography during our recent driving tour of the Snowy Mountains and Canberra regions of my state of New South Wales, Australia. Happily, I got shots of the comet on both nights, and this one was from the second night at Tumut, NSW.
I created the image by shooting 19 individual frames and combining them using the "stacking" process, reducing digital noise and enhancing the scene's overall clarity. I shot each of those single photos with my Canon EOS 6D Mk II camera through a Yongnuo 50mm f/1.4 lens @ f/2.2, using an exposure time of 8 seconds @ ISO 6400.
Comet Leonard (C/2021 A1), taken through the scope at 1551mm and ISO 12800. This is a stack of 15 images each with 30 second exposure times.
St Leonards, Sydney, NSW, Australia. July 2017. Reflections in a water feature in the courtyard of the Forum building at the exit of St Leonards train station.
Leica R8. Summicron-R 50mm. Tmax 100 film. f16 4sec.
Have enjoyed capturing images of C/2021 A1 Leonard and this is my last capture of these splendid comet and its tail (click image for full view). This was done as 6 panels to create a mosaic in order to capture as much as could do before it descended to the horizon beyond my good FOV. 30s x 20 for each panel. Setup is Explore Scientific ED102, ASIAIR Pro, ASI294MC on Skywatcher HEQ5Pro. Pixinsight, PTGui (for the mosaic) and Photoshop. 1 Jan 2022 / Bay of Islands - NZ.
#ASIWEEK
In Britain there are only 174 churches dedicated to St Leonard and this one is the last remaining building in the ancient and abandoned village of Hartley Mauditt in Hampshire. It was built between 1150 and 1200 and is still in use but serves a community of more modern and diverse parishioners.
According to the Domesday Book compiled for William the Conqueror in 1086, the hamlet of Hartley Mauditt was considered to be medium sized with 13 households, 8 villagers and 5 smallholders. It had ploughlands, plough teams, 6 acres of meadow and 30 swine render.
Today, all that remains of the hamlet is this Church, the foundations of a manor house and a pond. The area adjacent to the Church is shown as an abandoned medieval village on Ordnance Survey maps. It is thought that once the manor house was demolished in the 18th century the village went into a steady decline and eventually abandoned.
171402 forms the 2D31 1325 Ashford International - Eastbourne, seen passing St.Leonard' Depot, 10th September 2020
...with Leonard.
"I just like to put the flowers in it." -Leonard about his art. He explained that he made the flowers by punching the wet adobe.
As I continue archiving my work I keep finding things. I did this for Audio Magazine in 1992. I did illustrations for their record reviews from 1979 to 1995. I liked this little watercolor at the time. Now I need to find the original.